321

I am getting the following exception repeatedly each time I try to run the program.

Error occurred during initialization of VM

Could not reserve enough space for object heap

Could not create the Java virtual machine.

I tried to increase my virtual memory (page size) and RAM size, but to no avail.

How can I eliminate this error?

4
  • possible duplicate of Java Refuses to Start - Could not reserve enough space for object heap
    – daveb
    Dec 9, 2010 at 17:48
  • 2
    I also get this error when using jdk/jre 1.6 on my virtual machine, tried to change config values given in comments but this was not helping, after updating to jdk 1.7 the error is gone and larger Xmx parameters applied. Seems there are many changes with heap usage since java 1.6. Jan 29, 2015 at 13:17
  • I got similar error on Ubuntu 20.04 after upgrading from Ubuntu 18.04. I was using OpenJDK version 12 earlier and even though OpenJDK version 12 was available for Ubuntu 20.04, it didn't work for a complex Java app. Upgrading to more modern OpenJDK version (sudo apt install openjdk-17-jdk openjdk-12-jdk-, the dash at the end of openjdk-12-jdk tells system to uninstall that package while installing another) things started to work as expected again. Sep 23, 2022 at 8:15
  • The error messages I got were Not enough space available on the backing filesystem to hold the current max and Forcefully lowering max Java heap size to 0M. The interesting thing was that I had -Xmx3000m and system had 16 GB free RAM and filesystem had ~60 GB free space. And java forcing the max heap size to zero is obviously not going to work so I guess that's some weird bug in JVM. Sep 23, 2022 at 8:21

27 Answers 27

238

Run the JVM with -XX:MaxHeapSize=512m (or any big number as you need) (or -Xmx512m for short)

12
  • 42
    Or the shorter, -mx256m or -mx512m ;) Dec 9, 2010 at 19:55
  • 8
    Is -mx the same as -Xmx and -XX:MaxHeapSize? Aug 20, 2012 at 18:57
  • 24
    Thanks.. turns out too big a number could also be an issue and can give the same error! Sep 3, 2014 at 23:00
  • 24
    Anyone found a solution that actually work 100% of the time? This solution solves the problem temporarily but then suddenly it comes back. I've got 16GB ram and I'm tired of this sh*t. Everything was better in the old days :[
    – Nilzor
    Oct 1, 2014 at 13:06
  • 6
    Doesn't work for me on Windows 8 with x86 or x64 Java. Jul 27, 2015 at 13:13
139

This can also be caused by setting something too large on a 32-bit HotSpot vm, for example:

-Xms1536m -Xmx1536m

where this might/would work:

-Xms1336m -Xmx1336m
3
  • 5
    I forgot to mention that this problem would have to occur while launching in a 32-bit command shell. A 64-bit command shell may not have this problem.
    – djangofan
    Sep 10, 2012 at 3:37
  • For me it failed with default value and with a value too big so make sure you try multiple values. Thanks for the answer!
    – Trax
    Aug 8, 2019 at 16:17
  • 1
    Good tip that it fails when its is set to a value higher than what is available. For me it failed because it was set to 5G and its was running on a tiny instance, reducing to 512 seems to work better
    – PJUK
    Jan 15, 2021 at 14:26
62

here is how to fix it:

  • Go to Start->Control Panel->System->Advanced(tab)->Environment Variables->System

    Variables->New: Variable name: _JAVA_OPTIONS Variable value: -Xmx512M Variable name: Path
    Variable value: %PATH%;C:\Program Files\Java\jre6\bin;F:\JDK\bin;

Change this to your appropriate path.

2
52

I ran into this when using javac, and it doesn't seem to pick up on the command line options,

-bash-3.2$ javac -Xmx256M HelloWorldApp.java 
Error occurred during initialization of VM
Could not reserve enough space for object heap
Error: Could not create the Java Virtual Machine.
Error: A fatal exception has occurred. Program will exit.

so the solution here it so set _JAVA_OPTIONS

-bash-3.2$ export _JAVA_OPTIONS="-Xmx256M"
-bash-3.2$ javac HelloWorldApp.java 
Picked up _JAVA_OPTIONS: -Xmx256M

And this compiles fine.

This happens to me on machines with a lot of RAM, but with lower memory ulimits. Java decides to allocate a big heap because it detects the ram in the machine, but it's not allowed to allocate it because of ulimits.

2
  • 2
    +1 for pointing out _JAVA_OPTIONS — in my case java is called from somewhere deep within a shell script to which I have no write access, so this option is preferable.
    – gerrit
    May 15, 2015 at 9:50
  • Same here. I'm using university computers so I'm not an admin (can't change environmental variables) and the command line option was not working at all. Thanks so much!
    – Kimbluey
    Feb 11, 2017 at 3:23
45

32-bit Java requires contiguous free space in memory to run. If you specify a large heap size, there may not be so much contiguous free space in memory even if you have much more free space available than necessary.

Installing a 64-bit version of Java helps in these cases, the contiguous memory requirements only applies to 32-bit Java.

4
  • 2
    I think this is the best answer in case you keep getting the error after using the -Xmx[bignumber]m option. Helped me running Apache jMeter properly.
    – RuudvK
    Apr 10, 2018 at 13:18
  • I created a brand new project, with no code other than the auto generated main activity, and it produced this error
    – behelit
    Sep 11, 2018 at 0:47
  • 1
    I second @RuudvK. Installing 64-bit allowed me to increase the max memory while clearing the memory allocation error. This should be the accepted answer.
    – J Weezy
    Jan 2, 2019 at 23:26
  • Yes, just installing the 64 bit JDK made the error go away. Jan 5 at 17:21
33

Combined with -Xmx512M use -d64 to make sure you're running 64-bit VM. On a 64-bit machine I thought for sure I was running 64-bit virtual machine, but no. After installing 64-bit Java the -d64 option works and -Xmx allows much larger memory sizes.

java -d64 -Xmx512M mypackage.Test
2
  • 4
    This answer should be at the top. Spent two months battleing this issue, just to realise that installing 64 bit Java solved the issue (the -d64 option wasn't necessary in my case)
    – Nilzor
    Oct 27, 2014 at 14:16
  • Picked up _JAVA_OPTIONS: -d64 -Xmx1024M Unrecognized option: -d64 The JVM could not be started. The maximum heap size (-Xmx) might be too large or an antivirus or firewall tool could block the execution.
    – Alexander
    Jun 15, 2018 at 9:30
20

Open gradle.properties file in android folder.

Replace this line:

org.gradle.jvmargs=-Xmx1536M

with:

org.gradle.jvmargs=-Xmx512m

Explanation: Max limit from Gradle document:

If the requested build environment does not specify a maximum heap size, the Daemon will use up to 512MB of heap.

2
  • Perfecto! This solution works for me on below config : Version: 1.55.2 (system setup) Commit: 3c4e3df9e89829dce27b7b5c24508306b151f30d Date: 2021-04-13T09:35:57.887Z Electron: 11.3.0 Chrome: 87.0.4280.141 Node.js: 12.18.3 V8: 8.7.220.31-electron.0 OS: Windows_NT x64 10.0.19042 May 26, 2021 at 11:21
  • 1
    I'm confused, the replaced size of 512m is actually lower than the original 1536M, right? How is a smaller size going to increase the max limit? It does not work for me, either. Jul 14, 2021 at 9:44
14

I got the same error and resolved this by configuring it in the run.conf.bat

Run the JVM with the configuring run.conf.bat in Jboss5x

If free memory is not available AS you are passing in the statement then please make changes in run.conf.bat

set "JAVA_OPTS=-Xms512m -Xmx512m -XX:MaxPermSize=256m"
8

I had similar issues. I had installed 32 bit version of Java on a 64 bit machine.

By uninstalling that version and installing 64 bit version of Java. I was able to resolve the issue.

7

I know there are a lot of answers here already, but none of them helped me. In the end I opened the file /etc/elasticsearch/jvm.options and changed:

-Xms2G
-Xmx2G

to

-Xms256M
-Xmx256M

That solved it for me. Hopefully this helps someone else here.

0
6

Suppose your class is called Test in package mypackage. Run your code like this:

java -Xmx1024m mypackage.Test

This will reserve 1024 MB of heap space for your code. If you want 512 MB, you can use:

java -Xmx512m mypackage.Test

Use little m in 1024m, 512m, etc

0
6

Sometimes, this error indicates that physical memory and swap on the server actually are fully utilized!

I was seeing this problem recently on a server running RedHat Enterprise Linux 5.7 with 48 GB of RAM. I found that even just running

java -version

caused the same error, which established that the problem was not specific to my application.

Running

cat /proc/meminfo

reported that MemFree and SwapFree were both well under 1% of the MemTotal and SwapTotal values, respectively:

MemTotal:     49300620 kB
MemFree:        146376 kB
...
SwapTotal:     4192956 kB
SwapFree:         1364 kB

Stopping a few other running applications on the machine brought the free memory figures up somewhat:

MemTotal:     49300620 kB
MemFree:       2908664 kB
...
SwapTotal:     4192956 kB
SwapFree:      1016052 kB

At this point, a new instance of Java would start up okay, and I was able to run my application.

(Obviously, for me, this was just a temporary solution; I still have an outstanding task to do a more thorough examination of the processes running on that machine to see if there's something that can be done to reduce the nominal memory utilization levels, without having to resort to stopping applications.)

2
  • Same here, java -version failing, even though top showed some free still :| (also said Error occurred during initialization of VM Could not reserve enough space for the card marking array sometimes). Fix seemed to be to run top, look for which processes were using the most RAM (VIRT column), kill them [postgres, appdynamics for me] :|
    – rogerdpack
    Oct 24, 2016 at 22:37
  • Could this be due to memory fragmentation? A reply above mentions contiguous free space. Jun 3, 2020 at 12:04
6

Error :

For the error, "error occurred during initialization of vm could not reserve enough space for object heap jboss"

Root Cause :

  • Improper/insufficient memory allocation to our JVM as mentioned below.

  • e.g. JAVA_OPTS="-Xms1303m -Xmx1303m -XX:MaxPermSize=256m" in jboss-eap-6.2\bin\standalone.conf or "JAVA_OPTS=-Xms1G -Xmx1G -XX:MaxPermSize=256M" in jboss-eap-6.2\bin\standalone.conf.bat which is nothing but JVM memory allocation pool parameters.

Resolution :

  • Increase the heap size. To increase the heap size,
  • goto -> jboss-eap-6.2\bin\standalone.conf.bat or jboss-eap-6.2\bin\standalone.conf
  • change ->JAVA_OPTS="-Xms256m -Xmx512m -XX:MaxPermSize=256m" where -Xms is Minimum heap size and -Xmx is Maximum heap size.
  • Usually its not recommanded to have same size for min and max.

  • If you are running your application from eclipse,

  • Double click on the server
  • select 'open launch configuration' you will be redirected to the window 'Edit launch configuration properties'.
  • In this windown goto the tab '(x)=Arguments'.
  • In VM Arguments, define your heap size as mentioned below
  • "-Dprogram.name=JBossTools: JBoss EAP 6.1+ Runtime Server" -server -Xms256m -Xmx512m -XX:MaxPermSize=256m -Dorg.jboss.resolver.warning=true
1
  • A quote from the Oracle Command Line Reference: "For best performance, set -Xms to the same size as the maximum heap size, for example: java -Xgcprio:throughput -Xmx:64m -Xms:64m myApp" Mar 3, 2017 at 10:33
4

I recently faced this issue. I have 3 java applications that start with 1024m or 1280m heap size. Java is looking at the available space in swap, and if there is not enough memory available, the jvm exits.

To resolve the issue, I had to end several programs that had a large amount of virtual memory allocated.

I was running on x86-64 linux with a 64-bit jvm.

4

I had right amount of memory settings but for me it was using a 64bit intellij with 32 bit jvm. Once I switched to 64 bit VM, the error was gone.

1
  • This solution worked for me!
    – RCW
    Dec 6, 2021 at 22:50
3

If you're running 32bit JVM, change heap size to smaller would probabaly help. You can do this by passing args to java directly or through enviroment variables like following,

java -Xms128M -Xmx512M
JAVA_OPTS="-Xms128M -Xmx512M"

For 64bit JVM, bigger heap size like -Xms512M -Xmx1536M should work.

Run java -version or java -d32, java--d64 for Java7 to check which version you're running.

2

Assuming you have enough free memory and you setup you JVM arguments correctly, you might have a problem of memory fragmentation. Check Java maximum memory on Windows XP.

1

Anyway, here is how to fix it: Go to Start->Control Panel->System->Advanced(tab)->Environment Variables->System Variables->New: Variable name: _JAVA_OPTIONS Variable value: -Xmx512M

OR

Change the ant call as shown as below.

   <exec
        **<arg value="-J-Xmx512m" />**
    </exec>

It worked for me.

1

Error occurred during initialization of VM Could not reserve enough space for 1572864KB object heap

I changed value of memory in settings.grade file 1536 to 512 and it helped

1

Go to Start->Control Panel->System->Advanced(tab)->Environment Variables->System Variables->New:

Variable name: _JAVA_OPTIONS
Variable value: -Xmx512M
1
  • Setting this globally limits the heap size that you can give to IntelliJ. Mar 10, 2019 at 8:04
0

In case you are running a java program: - run your program in a terminal using the correct command for linux it would be 'java -jar myprogram.jar' and add -Xms256m -Xmx512m, for instance: 'java -jar myprogram.jar Xms256m -Xmx512m'

In case you are running a .sh script (linux, mac?) or a .bat script (windows) open the script and look for the java options if they are present and increase the memory.

If all of the above doesn't work, check your processes (ctrl+alt+delete on windows) (ps aux on linux/mac) and kill the processes which use allot of memory and are not necessary for your operating system! => Try to re-run your program.

0

In CASSANDRA_HOME/bin/cassandra.bat you would find following configuration

REM JVM Opts we'll use in legacy run or installation
set JAVA_OPTS=-ea^
 -javaagent:"%CASSANDRA_HOME%\lib\jamm-0.3.0.jar"^
 -Xms**2G**^
 -Xmx**2G**^

You can reduce 2G to some smaller number for e.g. 1G or even lesser and it should work.

Same if you are running on unix box, change in .sh file appropriately.

0

I got the same error and it got resolved when I deleted temp files using %temp% and restarting eclipse.

0
0

Sometimes it relates as

$ sysctl vm.overcommit_memory
vm.overcommit_memory = 2

If you set it to:

$ sysctl vm.overcommit_memory=0

It should work.

0

Replace -Xmx2G with -Xms512M or any greater memory size in cassandra.bat file in cassandra bin directory.

0

In my case I couldn't increase org.gradle.jvmargs=-Xmx... in gradle.properties beyond 1GB. It didn't work because I had two Java installation on my machine, one 32 bit (Gradle was using this one) and the other 64 bit. I resolved the problem by adding JAVA_HOME environment variable pointing to 64 bit Java.

-2

No need to do anything just chnage in POM file like below

<configuration>
    <maxmemory>1024M</maxmemory>
</configuration>
1
  • 3
    Who said anything about a POM file?
    – Henley
    Nov 18, 2014 at 0:56

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